The agreement capped a week of arguments over competing resolutions offered by the US and Russia. The American version included multiple condemnations of the Syrian government and threats of new sanctions if the entire Syrian military didn’t withdraw unilaterally to their barracks. The Russian version simply authorized the observers. In the end, the Russian version won out, but with a compromise that added “profound regret” for the past deaths of Syrian civilians to the text.

Author: Jason Ditz

This is terribly dangerous for Syria and it should not have accepted it. In the Pandora’s Box of 300 there may lie some hidden tricks, especially if all or a major part of the observers are from NATO countries.
What if 10% of them are military experts and spies who are intended to actually help the NATO terrorists there. Each observer members should then be closely watched by Syrian security forces.

What if 50% of the observers are actually US Special Forces and CIA agents? And what if after a couple of days the team indicates unwillingness to continue and wants to return and upon leaving switches that 50% with the run of the mill terrorists? Now Assad has to deal with 150 military experts leading various terrorist groups all over Syria.